The Historical Development of the Kentucky Courts

The Historical Development of the Kentucky Courts

Kentucky Law Journal Volume 47 | Issue 4 Article 1 1959 The iH storical Development of the Kentucky Courts William E. Bivin Legislative Research Commission Follow this and additional works at: https://uknowledge.uky.edu/klj Part of the Courts Commons, Legal History Commons, and the State and Local Government Law Commons Right click to open a feedback form in a new tab to let us know how this document benefits you. Recommended Citation Bivin, William E. (1959) "The iH storical Development of the Kentucky Courts," Kentucky Law Journal: Vol. 47 : Iss. 4 , Article 1. Available at: https://uknowledge.uky.edu/klj/vol47/iss4/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Law Journals at UKnowledge. It has been accepted for inclusion in Kentucky Law Journal by an authorized editor of UKnowledge. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Historical Development of the Kentucky Courts By WmLiAm E. BiviN I. COURTS OF THE FRONTIER PERIOD The purpose of this report is to outline the historical evolution of Kentucky's judicial system. Emphasls is placed upon the provis- ions of each of Kentucky s four constitutions, implementing sta- tutes and judicial decisions. These have shaped the various pat- terns of organizational structure and ]urisdiction, determined the methods of selecting and removing judges, and established stand- ards governing judicial qualifications and compensation. These aspects of the judicial system are discussed separately with re- spect to conditions existing: (1) during the frontier period; (2) after statehood and the 1792 constitution; (3) under the 1799 constitution; (4) under the 1850 constitution; and (5) under the present constitution. A simple system was adequate to meet the requirements of the early pioneer communities in Kentucky Crnmes were rare because men were bound closely by common danger and pos- sessed very little property of a kind subject to theft. Litigation was unusual since there were few commercial transactibns. The most frequent offense was assault and battery, and personal dis- putes often were settled by wager of battle in a fist-and-skull encounter. For the most part, the military organization main- tamed civil order in Kentucky's fortified frontier settlements prior to 1776. In the winter of that year Virginia granted to Ken- tucky the status of a county, and placed limited powers of civil government in a system of local courts.i * Tis article was originally prepared by Mr. Bivin for the Legislative Re- search Commission. It is published in substantially the same form as Legislative Research Commission Publication No. 63. *0 A.B., LL.B., Member of the Kentucky Bar, Senior Administrative Analyst, Legislative Research Commission. 1 Levin, The Lawyers and Lawmakers of Kentucky 8-10 (1897); 1 Collins, History of Kentucky 249-50 (1924); 2 id. 606. KENTUCKY LAW JouNAL[Vl. [Vol. 47, Inferior Trial Courts The local courts initially provided for Kentucky County were organized into a system consisting of: (1) three Courts of Quarter-Sessions meeting quarter-yearly and having jurisdiction to try misdemeanors and civil cases involving more than twenty- five shillings (The first court ever held in Kentucky met in quar- ter-session at Harrodsburg in the spring of 1777.); (2) three County Courts meeting monthly to handle business of civil ad- ministration other than that expressly given to the Quarter-Session Courts; and (3) special Examining Courts held by individual jus- tices of the peace to inquire into and determine the validity of serious criminal charges. Examining justices could dismiss the charges or hold the accused over for trial with or without bail. What this system required by way of the exact number of justices, their tenure, removal, qualifications or compensation is not known. It is known that the Governor of Virginia appointed justices of the peace who were assigned to serve on one court or the other. General Trial Court The typical pattern of court organization provided for colonies and frontier territories in other areas of the country during this period included a centralized trial court of general jurisdiction.' Kentucky County had no such court. Important cases, e.g., those involving capital punishment or title to land, could be tried only in Virginia at Richmond or Williamsburg.4 The need for a general trial court, however, became apparent as soon as settlement grew heavier. The Virginia land law did not provide for a general official rectangular survey of Kentucky into whole, half and quarter sections. Instead, each possessor of a land warrant located it where he pleased and surveyed it at his own expense. Confusion and disputes resulting from the vague and inaccurate descriptions made by hunters and pioneers pro- duced a flood of land-seeking settlers.5 A consequent increase in population led to the elevation of Kentucky County to the status of a district in 1783. At the same time a centralized trial court 2 Ibid. 3 Council of State Governments, Trial Courts of General Jurisdiction in the Forty-Eight States 1 (1951). 4 Supra note 1. 5 1 Collins, op. cit. supra note 1, at 253. 1959] KENTucKy CouRTs of general jurisdiction was established. The court was styled the Supreme Court for the District of Kentucky, and it had general trial jurisdiction of all criminal and civil cases. Territorially, its jurisdiction was co-extensive with the district. The court held its first session at Harrodsburg, and seventeen culprits were presented to the grand jury-nine for keeping tip- pling-houses and eight for other offenses. A courthouse and jail of hewed or sawed logs nine inches thick was built at Danville." Appellate Courts Virginia did not organize a court with authority to handle ap- pellate work in Kentucky. Litigants in Kentucky County and the District of Kentucky could obtain review of the judgments rend- ered by local trial courts only by crossing the mountains to the Virginia Court of Appeals. II. STATEHOOD-COURTS FROM 1792 TO 1799 The first constitution of the State of Kentucky was adopted and ratified in convention at Danville on April 19, 1792. It pro- vided that the government should commence on June 1 of that year, the effective date of Kentucky's admission to the federal union. The plan for organization of the government outlined in the constitution established the judiciary as one of three equal departments. The drafters of Kentucky's ftrst constitution followed the fed- eral example and made no attempt to spell out in detail a rigid system of courts. Instead, they established a very flexible system by inserting broad language which created: ... one supreme court, which shall be styled the Court of Appeals and.., such inferior courts as the Legislature may, from time to time, ordain and establish.8 The constitution empowered the legislature to outline the de- tailed pattern of organizational structure, to determine the neces- sary number and proper allocation of judges, and to define and alter the jurisdiction of the courts. Pursuant to this broad author- ity, the first session of the legislature passed an act that William 6 Id. at 258. 7Clark, A History of Kentucky 77 (1950). SKy. Const., Art. V, § 1 (1792). KENTUCKY LAW JoURNAL [Vol. 47, Littlel called "important as being one of the links by which the legislature have connected the practical jurisprudence of this country with that of Virginia." The act organized Kentucky's judicial departnfient into a system consisting of the following: (1) two sets of inferior trial courts, the Courts of Quarter-Sessions and County Courts; (2) a criminal court of general jurisdiction, the Court of Oyer and Terminer; and (3) one supreme court, the Court of Appeals." Injerior Trial Courts The legislature authorized the appointment of 125 justices of the peace for service on the inferior courts. The appointments were made from each of thirteen counties in accordance with the following statutorily fixed quota: three in Logan; eight in Shelby; nine each in Jefferson, Scoft, Washington, and Bourbon; ten each in Mason, Woodford, Madison, Lincoln and Mercer; twelve in Fayette; and sixteen in Nelson."° The legislature established a Court of Quarter-Sessions in each county, and provided that three of each county's quota of justices serve on this court. Any two of the three justices constituted a quorum. The court held three sessions a year, each lasting six juridical days unless the business before it was finished sooner. It was a court of record, and succeeded to most of the civil powers, authority and jurisdiction that the Supreme Court for the District of Kentucky had under Virginia law. Court of Quarter- Sessions had jurisdiction to try all civil cases, at common-law and chancery, amounting to more than five pounds "current money" or.1,000 pounds of tobacco, and criminal cases not punishable by loss of life or member. Jurisdiction extended to all cases, involving escheats and forfeitures, and it had power to award writs of ne exeat and habeas corpus and injunctions." Judges of Court of Quarter-Sessions also sat in the capacity of Examining Court to inquire into and determine the validity of criminal charges. Criminal charges could be made under oath before any Quarter-Sessions judge. If in the judge's opinion the charge ought to be examined, he took recognizances of material witnesses, committed the accused to county jail, and issued his 9 1 Littel, The Statute Law of Kentucky 90 (1819) (hereinafter cited as - Litt. - ). 10Id ch. 23, §1. 11 Id.ch. 23. § 6. 1959] KENTUCKY COURTS warrant to the sheriff directing him to summon the other justices of Quarter-Sessions to sit as Examining Court within not less than five nor more than ten days. Examining Court had power to dismiss the charges altogether, to commit the accused person to county jail for trial before the next Quarter-Session, or to the state public jail at Lexington for trial before the Court of Oyer and Terminer.

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